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British Columbia

Decision to close B.C. salmon farms was necessary, Fisheries Ministry says amid court challenges

The federal government is standing by its decision not to renew licences for 15 open-net Atlantic salmon farms in British Columbia's Discovery Islands, despite recent court challenges.

2 First Nations and salmon-farming operation are challenging decision in court

A school of red-tinged salmon on the move in green waters.
The federal government argues the decision not to renew fish farm licences will help protect B.C.'s wild salmon populations from disease. (CBC)

The federal government is standing by its decision not to renew licences for 15 open-net Atlantic salmon farms in British Columbia's Discovery Islands, despite recent court challenges.

A statement from the office of Fisheries Minister Joyce Murray says her decision last month against renewing the licences for the farms off Vancouver Island near Campbell River was difficult but necessary.

The statement saysthe federal government is taking a precautionary approach to help ensure the well-being of threatened species, with recent science suggestinguncertainty about risks posed to wild salmon by the area's farms.

Mowi Canada West, one of several companies operating farms in the Discovery Islands, is seeking a judicial review of Murray's decision.

Mowi's application, filed this week in federal court in Vancouver, seeks an order quashing or setting aside the decision and a declaration that Murray's determination was "unreasonable, invalid and unlawful."

It says the company has been operating in the Campbell River area for 30 years, is highly involved in the coastal communities and has business agreements with 10 First Nations and 10 Indigenous-owned companies.

The application says the company's workforce has been reduced from 645 employees to 312 and the "decision only deepens the harms to Mowi's business, Indigenous self-governance and the economy of coastal B.C."

The industry off B.C.'s coast hasbeen a major flashpointin the debate over farmed salmon, with environmental groups and some Indigenous nations saying the farms are linked to disease that transfers to wild salmon, while the industry, local politicians and other First Nations say they are safe and the closures threaten thousands of jobs.

The We Wai Kai Nation issued an open letter to its membership this week explaining its decision to also challenge Murray's decision in federal court.

"To be clear, this challenge is not about our support or opposition to fish farming,"Chief Councillor Ronnie Chickitesaid. "Our challenge makes it clear that we have not defined our position on salmon farming in our waters. This is about our right as titleholders to make decisions about how our territory is used."

The Fisheries Ministry statement says it will not comment further now the matter is before the courts.